constantly running water? you must be kidding...
Gray water for soaking heavily soiled items, burnt-in pots or greasy deep-fryer bowls and the like (from shower, bathtub, washer or even best: from the first hot cycle of the dishwasher).
Then some fresh hot water with dish liquid, then a quick dip in pure hot water to rinse off the dish soap. (Never running water, always an extra bowl right next to me to dip and rinse.)
Once that bowl has cooled down too much, I add it to the wash water (the detergent water) and I'll get myself another small bowl of "hot-dipping" rinse water.
After that comes the drying rack. *Shrugs*
Tip of the day: Should you ever encounter a pot with extremely tough or heavily burnt-in stuff (like when you forgot and there were some first signs of smoke, the carbonation-type of "burnt-in", just boil it up with laundry detergent (not dishwasher powder) and let it cool down overnight. (Watch out, it will boil up and come up foaming over the top in seconds, so be careful and very swift!).
The next day you don't need any steel scrubbers or brillo pads or what have you. It just wipes away, just like that (a Finnish trick that works like a charm): No scratches, no scrubbing. Stainless steel will keep its shine.
Gray water for soaking heavily soiled items, burnt-in pots or greasy deep-fryer bowls and the like (from shower, bathtub, washer or even best: from the first hot cycle of the dishwasher).
Then some fresh hot water with dish liquid, then a quick dip in pure hot water to rinse off the dish soap. (Never running water, always an extra bowl right next to me to dip and rinse.)
Once that bowl has cooled down too much, I add it to the wash water (the detergent water) and I'll get myself another small bowl of "hot-dipping" rinse water.
After that comes the drying rack. *Shrugs*
Tip of the day: Should you ever encounter a pot with extremely tough or heavily burnt-in stuff (like when you forgot and there were some first signs of smoke, the carbonation-type of "burnt-in", just boil it up with laundry detergent (not dishwasher powder) and let it cool down overnight. (Watch out, it will boil up and come up foaming over the top in seconds, so be careful and very swift!).
The next day you don't need any steel scrubbers or brillo pads or what have you. It just wipes away, just like that (a Finnish trick that works like a charm): No scratches, no scrubbing. Stainless steel will keep its shine.